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hanging the bag out

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bazmoore | 17:37 Sat 02nd Sep 2006 | Phrases & Sayings
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i work in the haulage industry and there a commonly used phrase, "hanging the bag out ". which means making a job last longer than it should by dawdling or taking a longer route (in order to earn more money).
i suspect it originates in the coal mines of the north east has anyone else heard of it an know of its origins?
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This link confirms what you say in option no. 2. I don't recommend experimenting with option no. 1.

http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term =hanging+the+bag+out
As no-one has replied yet, Baz, let me have a guess. Beggars and street buskers usually have a receptacle of some kind into which they hope kindly passers-by will drop some money. In earlier times, when men invariably wore hats, a cap would be passed round to collect tips for bus-drivers and so on. It strikes me that such receptacles/caps are pretty much a form of 'bag', so I wonder whether that is the source of your saying, which I must confess I have never heard used.
The idea behind it, therefore, is one of receiving "money for nothing very much" as it were, which seems to be what your drivers are doing.
Well, well, well! Grunty's response was definitely not there when I started to type mine. Just like buses, these answers, aren't they? You wait for ages and then two come along at once!

I' m still puzzled, though, as to what sort of bag it was and why would miners hang one out?
I was saying to someone yesterday that my mother used to say that to me when I was a little mite, prolonging having to go to bed. But I was trying to see the relevance. I was thinking that if it was something to do with miners, then maybe they hung a bag outside to show that they were still in there working! What the heck? I don't know!!!
I work in engineering in the south east and we use the term when someone is given a job and it takes longer than it should. Sometimes to get into overtime rates. You take your tool/toolbag and put it on the job to show you are working on it.

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